Infinitely productive language can arise from chance under communicative pressure

IF 2.1 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
S. Piantadosi, Evelina Fedorenko
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

Human communication is unparalleled in the animal kingdom. The key distinctive feature of our language is productivity: we are able to express an infinite number of ideas using a limited set of words. Traditionally, it has been argued or assumed that productivity emerged as a consequence of very specific, innate grammatical systems. Here we formally develop an alternative hypothesis: productivity may have rather solely arisen as a consequence of increasing the number of signals (e.g. sentences) in a communication system, under the additional assumption that the processing mechanisms are algorithmically unconstrained. Using tools from algorithmic information theory, we examine the consequences of two intuitive constraints on the probability that a language will be infinitely productive. We prove that under maximum entropy assumptions, increasing the complexity of a language will not strongly pressure it to be finite or infinite. In contrast, increasing the number of signals in a language increases the probability of languages that have—in fact—infinite cardinality. Thus, across evolutionary time, the productivity of human language could have arisen solely from algorithmic randomness combined with a communicative pressure for a large number of signals.
无限多产的语言可以在交际压力下偶然产生
人类的交流在动物界是无与伦比的。我们的语言最显著的特点是生产力:我们能够用有限的一组单词表达无限的想法。传统上,人们一直认为或认为生产力是非常具体的、天生的语法系统的结果。在这里,我们正式提出了另一种假设:在额外的假设下,处理机制在算法上不受约束的情况下,生产力可能仅仅是由于通信系统中信号(例如句子)数量的增加而产生的。使用算法信息论的工具,我们检查了两个直觉约束对语言无限生产力概率的影响。我们证明,在最大熵假设下,增加语言的复杂性不会强烈地迫使它是有限的或无限的。相反,增加一种语言中信号的数量会增加语言实际上具有无限基数的概率。因此,在整个进化过程中,人类语言的生产力可能仅仅来自于算法的随机性和大量信号的交流压力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Language Evolution
Journal of Language Evolution Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
8
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